Current Affairs.
We were warned about events such as in the Ballarat Catholic Diocese. But they were even worse than what we expected. Bishops have been warned for a long time but they have ignored the warnings. See article below that I posted on 22 February 2013.
Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, formerly Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney (1984-2004) has consistently and firmly drawn attention to the damage that sexual abuse was wreaking on individuals and the integrity of the Catholic Church.
As early as 1997, when launching ‘Towards Healing’, Bishop Robinson called on Pope John Paul II to commission a church-wide study of clerical sexual abuse. He was ignored and increasingly side-lined.
Geoffrey Robinson has publicly said that he had suffered from sexual abuse. This made him more demanding of the Catholic Church in this area. He was also greatly influenced by the stories he had heard since 1994 when he had been appointed to the bishops’ national approach to what were called “Special Issues”. This subsequently became the Professional Standards Committee to develop procedures to respond to sex abuse complaints. This work culminated in ‘Towards Healing’. I am told by very well-informed sources that in this work on the committee he encountered both scoffing and disbelief from some bishops, including archbishops. He incurred the wrath of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and Cardinal Ratzinger personally for his supposed disloyalty and dubious orthodoxy.
Unfortunately for the Church, Bishop Robinson resigned in 2004, soon after he had finished his term on the Towards Healing committee. His resignation was for health reasons. He is now ‘Bishop Emeritus’.
After his resignation as Bishop, he commenced work on the book which he published in 2007 ‘Confronting Power and Sex in the Catholic Church’. That book highlighted two things. The first was that sexual abuse was an awful but only one expression of the endemic abuse of power generally in the Catholic Church. Second he highlighted that if the sexual abuse crisis was to be effectively addressed, the Catholic Church needed to make fundamental and far-reaching changes. He stressed that sexual abuse was at the core of the Church’s ugly culture and anti-humane procedures. In such a situation he insisted that the process of scrutiny and reform must go wherever the truth leads.
In May 2008, after the publication of his book, the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference issued a statement critical of the book and Bishop Robinson. The statement said
‘…The book’s questioning of the authority of the Church is connected to Bishop Robinson’s uncertainty about the knowledge and authority of Christ himself. Catholics believe that the Church, founded by Christ is endowed by him with a teaching office which endures through time. This is why the Church’s Magisterium teaches the truth authoritatively in the name of Christ. The book casts doubt upon these teachings. This leads in turn to the questioning of Catholic teaching on, among other things, the nature of Tradition, the inspiration of the Holy Scripture, the infallibility of the Councils and the Pope, the authority of the Creeds, the nature of the ministerial priesthood and central elements of the Church’s moral teaching.’
Take that, Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, for telling us some unpalatable truths!
Before a proposed visit to the US shortly after the launch of his book he was asked by Cardinal Giovanni Re, Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, to cancel his tour because ‘some bishops in the United States are concerned that you have been invited by some organisations that are not in communion with the Catholic Church’. Bishop Robinson went ahead with the tour.
Bishop Geoffrey Robinson has paid a price for telling the truth. In his own archdiocese of Sydney he commented ‘I have been excluded from a number of ceremonies usually performed by bishops. On the other hand, I have been overwhelmed by an outpouring of support from Catholic people’.
The world Catholic Church and particularly the Church in Australia owes Geoffrey Robinson a great debt for his integrity and courage in the face of clerical bullying. He still has a lot to contribute, perhaps more than anyone else I know in the Catholic Church in addressing its present crisis.
If only the bishops in Australia and Rome started listening to him way back in 1997 when he went public for the first time on the issue of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.
(I should add that I have not spoken to Bishop Geoffrey Robinson either directly or indirectly on these matters. I have only met him once and that was quite briefly and casually six or seven years ago.)
John Menadue
John Menadue is the Founder and Editor in Chief of Pearls and Irritations. He was formerly Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet under Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser, Ambassador to Japan, Secretary of the Department of Immigration and CEO of Qantas.
Comments
3 responses to “John Menadue. How the Australian Bishops and Rome ignored the warnings.”
Also on that Committee, or rather, joint head of that Committee with Robinson, was the Provincial of an order who at the very same time was covering up the sexual abuse of at least 49 little girls, many abused for several years, many first targeted when only six years old.
I am one of those girls.
Most have never received any support, compassion or assistance to heal, despite being on the church’s own list of acknowledged victims. All have been silenced and ostracised. All have had their needs ignored. All have been denied justice.
The predator was never reported to the police (until I did so in 2008), but was moved interstate under a different name, and his new community was never warned he was a dangerous and prolific child sex offender.
I met with Bishop Robinson in 2010 and asked him about his co-author of Towards Healing and the hypocrisy of this cover-up during the development of Towards Healing. Robinson refused to discuss the issue. The church official involved enjoys a cosy posting at the UN in New York, in no danger of Australian law enforcement investigating his criminal conspiracy to cover up many hundreds of child sex crimes.
Part of the enormous additional harm inflicted on us beyond the sexual abuse itself is the secrecy and lies from church officials about something which is so very personal and so very hurtful to us. Please contact me if you have any information which could throw light on what happened in 1996. I have had to piece the story together from snippets of information from various sources. The church could put me out of my misery, but considers the additional pain of so many damaged little girls (and boys) to be an acceptable price to pay for the protection of its reputation.
The hierarchy of the Church seem undecided as to whether they are pastors, administrators or politicians. Overall they seem to favour the last two roles which leads to the hierachy generally telling the laity what to do rather than demonstrating how the laity should behave. If it was a war there are few clerics I would follow into battle as most of them would be far behind the front. For me the hierachy are full of pious talk but fails to inspire me.
It is difficult to determine if the Vatican is just another government rather than leading Catholics. The real problem is not sexual abuse but an abuse of power dating back as far as the crusade against the Albigensians then the Hussites then the Lollards and so on. If Jesus was indeed God then one of the most impressive characteristics of his personality is his failure to use his power against those who hated him. So it is hard to actually see Jesus in our popes, cardinals, bishops and priests.
I ahve become very disillusioned with the way the Abuse in the church has been handled. I was mistaken in thinking that the problem was not in the large scale of things how wrong I was. your article is geting to the core of things great work